Over the last three months, thousands of Native Americans and allies have convened in Cannonball, ND to support the Standing Rock Sioux tribe as they resist the construction of the pipeline.

Organizers delivered a letter and chanted while holding banners and signs inside the branch, interrupting business. Supporters outside the branch handed out fliers to passersby that explain how Citibank is profiting from the Dakota Access Pipeline and that the bank is putting profits before human life and the right to clean drinking water by bankrolling the construction costs.

Energy Transfer Partners, the company that is building the Dakota Access pipeline, has bulldozed sacred burial sites in order to move forward with construction. Over the last six months, the indigenous-led resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline has been attacked by security dogs, pepper sprayed, and shot with rubber bullets. Those occupying the Chicago Citibank at 2555 N Clark St. demanded that Citibank stop funding the Dakota Access Pipeline project in support of those on the front lines of the resistance.

“Citibank’s funding of the pipeline directly contributes to the desecration of the sacred sites of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe,” said Rising Tide Chicago member Sean Estelle, who was arrested shutting down Citibank business.

Energy Transfer Partners has justified the need to take land for the pipeline via eminent domain by saying that it would improve national energy security, but the network of pipelines will allow oil that has been obtained from a controversial practice that may cause earthquakes, hydraulic fracturing or “fracking.” The pipeline would allow this oil to be exported all over the world from the Bakken Oil patch in North Dakota. Organizers of today’s demonstration are calling on Citibank to stop funding the Dakota Access Pipeline because it will contribute greatly to the human misery and suffering caused by global climate change. Over 40 acts of civil disobedience in support of the NODAPL land protectors have taken place around the country.

“It is unacceptable for Citibank to fund the destruction of indigenous sacred burial sites, the pollution of water, and a project that further fuels global climate change” said Angie Viands, with the climate justice group Rising Tide, who was arrested today. “We won’t let them fund human misery and racism — we’re fighting back.”